1 / 46

Missouri Lease Hunting/Fishing Arrangements (& Wildlife Watchers)

Missouri Lease Hunting/Fishing Arrangements (& Wildlife Watchers). Joe Parcell Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Missouri - Columbia. Lease Hunting. Provides landowners the opportunity to supplement their income while enhancing wildlife habitat on their property

Download Presentation

Missouri Lease Hunting/Fishing Arrangements (& Wildlife Watchers)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Missouri Lease Hunting/Fishing Arrangements(& Wildlife Watchers) Joe Parcell Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Missouri - Columbia

  2. Lease Hunting • Provides landowners the opportunity to supplement their income while enhancing wildlife habitat on their property • Recreational Lease • agreement between a person who controls access to the property and person who wishes to use the property for recreational use

  3. Hunting Equipment • Hunting Coat • Hunting Pants • Hunting Hat • Dog • Gun • 4-wheeler • Truck

  4. Note: • Native wildlife cannot be leased or sold by a landowner because it is publicly owned by the state. • The public owns it, but . . . • private land managers control wildlife populations

  5. The Leasing Process • What sportsman look for in a hunting lease: • Less competition from other hunters • Abundant game densities • An atmosphere in which they feel welcome • Safety • Convenience or close to home • Potential trophy quality game • Convenient, comfortable and dependable lodging

  6. Liability • Landowner should: • inspect property for hazards • inform lessee of hazards • adequate liability coverage • have lessee sign a proper written agreement with a liability waiver • monitor actions of lessee

  7. Liability • When landowner accepts a fee for hunting on their property, they take on legal responsibility for the safety of the hunters. • The paying hunter becomes the “invitee” • Missouri law states that landowners have a “duty of ordinary and reasonable care” to their invitees

  8. The Liability Cost • $1,000,000 Umbrella Liability policy • @$100/annually • It has been suggested that $500,000 is sufficient, but . . . • the cost of $500 K and $1 mil may not be that much different • Check with your insurance sales person

  9. Cost - Benefit Analysis • Cost are generally minimal in a simple lease • Legal fee to review the lease • Additional insurance premiums • Landowners time to: • write contract • interview lessee • analyze harvest information • monitor lessee

  10. Habitat Enhancement • “The Better the Experience, the More Hunters are willing to Pay” • Habitat management through: • brush control planting perennial grasses • choice of crops tillage • timber management burning • weed control

  11. Fee Hunting Income Potential

  12. Cost - Benefit • Minimum cost - $200 • Charge $3/acre • Conclusion: • minimum 70 acres to breakeven

  13. Cost - Benefit • Example • $3.00/acre hunt lease, $100 insurance, $50 legal fee, & $50 in landowner time • suppose you leave filter strip around 300 acre corn field • 4 acres out of production • Corn price $2.30 $2.50 $2.70 $2.80 • Net return from corn -$44 $36 $116 $196 • Lease net value $700 $700 $700 $700 • difference $744 $664 $584 $504

  14. Marketing • What game are you going to market? • Who is your target market? • How will you advertise?

  15. What game are you going to market?

  16. Deer Harvest in Central Missouri(10 districts reporting)

  17. Source: MDC 0.1 - 0.9 1.0 -1.9 0.0 > 2.0 Not surveyed

  18. Source: MDC 0 - 5 6 - 15 > 15 Not surveyed

  19. Source: MDC 0.0 - 0.4 0.5 - 1.0 Not surveyed < 1.0

  20. Missouri Dove Density Source: MDC

  21. Missouri Turkey Density Source: MDC

  22. Who is your target market?

  23. Game Bird Hunting • 19,341 pheasant hunters in Missouri in 1998 • 57,995 quail hunters in Missouri in 1998

  24. Turkey Licenses sold in MissouriSource: MDC

  25. 206,000 in age group 25 -64

  26. 793,000 in age group 25 -64

  27. 1,900,000 in age group 25 -64

  28. Advertising • Newspaper add • Suggested beginning at 45 days prior to season • Internet

  29. The Lease

  30. Types of leases • Year-round • Most year-round leases convey exclusive rights to specified recreational activities • Limited duration • Most seasonal leases convey exclusive rights to the specified recreational activities during the term of the agreement. • Day Hunting

  31. Types of leases • Guided Hunts • General recreational lease • Activities such as fishing, camping, hiking, or wildlife observation

  32. Every Written Lease Needs: • Description of the recreational rights, services and facilities being leased • Names of the lessor and lessees involved • Description of the property being leased • Species to be hunted • Terms of payment • Duration of the lease • Definition of who has recreational rights • Signatures

  33. Other Considerations

  34. Miscellaneous • Owner retains hunting rights for family/friends • Hunters record game harvest • If lessee builds a shelter • who provides the utilities? • who owns it?

  35. Care of Property • Access to hunting areas/Parking/When vehicles are allowed over fields • Improvements allowed to the lessee • Rules on opening and closing gates

  36. Care of Property • Restrictions on fires and cook stoves • Trash removal • Use of buildings, toilet facilities and water • Tree cutting

  37. Additional Benefits • Allows landowner to have someone monitor land for trespass problems • Lessee may be willing to exchange recreational rights for helping out on the property • Example • Given hunting rights for a year in return for helping paint a building

  38. Conclusions • Economic value • Liability • Market

More Related